A Manchester voter holds a sign of her preferred "city flag" design option. A non-binding question asks for voter preference on four options, including the current flag.

Dan Tuohy /NHPR

9:15 p.m. -- Democrat Joyce Craig has been elected mayor of Manchester, the first woman to ever win that office.

Craig defeated 4-term incumbent mayor Ted Gatsas by roughly 2,000 votes to claim the top spot in New Hampshire’s largest city.

Craig supporters were ecstatic Tuesday night as the results came in less than an hour after the city’s polls closed. Craig and Gatsas faced off on Election Day two years ago.

“Manchester’s best days are still ahead of us and I cannot wait to get to work as your mayor," Craig told supporters at the Puritan Conference Center in Manchester shortly after claiming victory.

Craig, a Democrat and former alderman, said she would work to improve the city’s schools and combat the opioid crisis on day one.

Craig will officially move into the mayor’s office in January.

Tune in to NHPR's Morning Edition Wednesday for more coverage of elections in Manchester and across the state.

5 p.m. -- Keno, which is on the ballot in 11 cities today, is a tough choice for some voters. Don Bourneaville tells NHPR, "You start bringing in gambling and stuff you are going to bring in other stuff and yet you go the other way and it's going to help out, so that is on the fence for me," he says.

4:30 p.m. -- What is motivating voters on Nov. 7, 2017? Outside a polling place in Manchester, NHPR's Paige Sutherland asked Guy Drapebu what brought him out today.

Manchester voters are asked to choose a city flag design in a non-binding, informational question Nov. 7.

The ballot question in Manchester about a proposed city flag design has caught some voters by surprise, NHPR has found in exit interviews. Others said they were torn over which of the four options, including the current flag, to pick. As Patty Hicks told NHPR's Paige Sutherland, with a laugh, "The toughest decision was on the flag."

In Nashua, Mayor Jim Donchess is not on the ballot because he was elected to a four-year term. Nashua voters will consider a multi-million performing arts center.-----------As it does every election, the New Hampshire Attorney General's Office has an election day hotline for complaints of alleged election law violations: 1-866-868-3703. -----------

10:30 a.m. update:

Most polls close at 7 p.m. In Manchester, Ward 2 moderator Nicholl Marshall anticipates heavier turnout than two years ago. Because, Marshall says, "if the mayor's race two years ago was decided by 64 votes that will make more people realize their vote counts and they'll be more inclined to turn out to the polls."

Patty Hicks, meanwhile, says it's time for change. She supports Craig. It was an easy choice, she says. "the toughest decision was on the flag," she says laughing.

The ballot in Manchester features a non-binding informational question. It asks voters to pick their preferred city flag, out of four options, including the current one.

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There are two special elections today for N.H. House vacancies. For a seat representing Manchester's Ward 8, the candidates are Republican Albert MacArthur and Democrat Erika Connors. In Sullivan County District 1, a seat representing Cornish, Grantham, Plainfield, and Springfield, the candidates are Democrat Brian M. Sullivan and Republican Margaret M. Drye.

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As voters head to the polls, NHPR's Casey McDermott reports that a lawsuit is still pending against a new voting law known as Senate Bill 3.